Encyclopedia of Environmental Science and Engineering, Volume I and II

(Ben Green) #1

AIR POLLUTION SOURCES 109


Part 2. Major Air Pollution Sources (continued)

Mineral products industry Nature of activity Type of air pollution problems

This section involves the processing and
production of various minerals. Mineral
processing is characterized by particulate
emissions in the form of dust. However, most
of the emissions from the manufacturing
process conventional in this section can be
reduced by conventional particulate control
equipment such as cyclones, scrubbers, and
fabric filters.

ASPHALT BATCH PLANTS Hot-mix asphalt paving consists of a
combination of aggregates, coarse or fine,
uniformly mixed and coated with asphalt
cement. The coarse aggregates are usually
crushed stone, crushed slag or crushed gravel,
while the fine aggregates are usually natural
sand and finely crushed stones.

The largest pollutant type is dust, emanating from the
rotary dryers and filtering systems, normally used in
producing asphalt.

ASPHALT ROOFING The manufacture of asphalt roofing felts and
shingles involves saturating a fiber media
with asphalt by means of dipping and/or
spraying.

The major pollutants are particulate emissions from
asphalt roofing plants during the asphalt blowing
operations and the felt saturation. Common methods
of control at asphalt saturation plants include
complete enclosure of the spray area and saturation
followed by good ventilation through one or more
collection devices. Some traces of carbon monoxide
and hydrocarbons are also present in the emissions
from this asphalt process.
BRICKS AND RELATED
CLAY PRODUCTS

The manufacture of brick and related products
such as clay pipe, pottery and some types of
refraction brick involves the grinding,
screening, blending of the raw materials,
forming, drying or curing, firing and ferial
cutting or shaping.

Particulate emissions similar to those obtained in clay
processing are emitted from the materials handling
process in refractory and brick manufacturing.
Gaseous fluorides and nitrogen oxides are also
emitted from brick manufacturing operations.

CALCIUM CARBIDE Calcium carbide is manufactured by heating a
mixture of quick-lime (CaO) and carbon in
an electric arc furnace when the lime is
reduced by the coke to calcium carbide and
carbon monoxide. About 1990 pounds of
lime and 1300 pounds of coke yield 1 ton of
calcium carbide.

Particulates, acetylena, sulfur compounds and some
carbon monoxide are emitted from calcium carbide
plants.

CASTABLE REFRACTORIES Castable or fused-cast refraction are
manufactured by carefully blending such
components as alumina, zirconia, silica,
chrome, and magnesium, melting the
mixture, pouring into molds, and slowly
cooling to the solid state.

Particulate emissions occur from drying, crushing and
handling procedures while gaseous fluoride occurs
during melting operations.

PORTLAND CEMENT
MANUFACTURING

Lime (calcareous), silica (siliceous), alumina
(argillaceous) and iron (ferriferous) are the
four major components used to manufacture
cement. The various substances are crushed in
exact proportions, fired in a klin, and then
ground in gypsum to be bagged for shipment
as cement.

Particulate matter is the primary emission in the
manufacture of portland cement and is emitted
primarily from crushing operations and rotary kilns.
Control systems usually include multicyclones,
electrostatic precipitators or combinations of these
types of control.

CERAMIC CLAY
MANUFACTURE

The manufacture of ceramic clay involves the
conditioning of the basic ores, coolinate and
mont-morillonite (aluminous-silicate
materials), into dry clay products.

Emissions consist primarily of particulates, but some
fluorides and acid gases are also emitted in the
drying process.

CLAY AND FLY ASH
SINTERING

Both the sintering clay and fly ash involve the
firing and burning off of residual matter to
desirable product. In fly ash, carbon is
burned off while in clay, entrained volatile
matter is driven off.

Dust is the major pollutant emitted from the screening
and sintering process.

COAL CLEANING Coal cleaning is the process by which
undesirable materials are removed from both

Particulates in the form of coal dust constitute the major
air pollution problem from coal clearing plants.

(continued)

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